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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Immunotherapy shrinks lung metastases in dogs with mammary cancer

By Sergent, Petra et al.·Published in Cells·2024·Department of Microbiology and Immunology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: An Abscopal Effect on Lung Metastases in Canine Mammary Cancer Patients Induced by Neoadjuvant Intratumoral Immunotherapy with Cowpea Mosaic Virus Nanoparticles and Anti-Canine PD-1.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with mammary cancer received a new type of treatment that combined a virus therapy with an immune checkpoint blocker. Over four weeks, the dogs showed significant tumor control, with reductions in both the injected tumors and even those not directly treated. In two dogs with lung metastases, the treatment helped shrink the tumors in their lungs as well. This approach appears promising and could lead to new options for treating mammary cancer in dogs.

People also search for: dog mammary cancer treatment · canine cancer immunotherapy · dog lung tumors treatment

Abstract

Neoadjuvant intratumoral (IT) therapy could amplify the weak responses to checkpoint blockade therapy observed in breast cancer (BC). In this study, we administered neoadjuvant IT anti-canine PD-1 therapy (IT acPD-1) alone or combined with IT cowpea mosaic virus therapy (IT CPMV/acPD-1) to companion dogs diagnosed with canine mammary cancer (CMC), a spontaneous tumor resembling human BC. CMC patients treated weekly with acPD-1 (n = 3) or CPMV/acPD-1 (n = 3) for four weeks or with CPMV/acPD-1 (n = 3 patients not candidates for surgery) for up to 11 weeks did not experience immune-related adverse events. We found that acPD-1 and CPMV/acPD-1 injections resulted in tumor control and a reduction in injected tumors in all patients and in noninjected tumors located in the ipsilateral and contralateral mammary chains of treated dogs. In two metastatic CMC patients, CPMV/acPD-1 treatments resulted in the control and reduction of established lung metastases. CPMV/acPD-1 treatments were associated with altered gene expression related to TLR1-4 signaling and complement pathways. These novel therapies could be effective for CMC patients. Owing to the extensive similarities between CMC and human BC, IT CPMV combined with approved anti-PD-1 therapies could be a novel and effective immunotherapy to treat local BC and suppress metastatic BC.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39273048/